
Top News
Strategic decisiveness is one of the most vital success attributes for leaders in every position and every industry, but few leaders understand where it comes from or how to find more of it. It is not surprising that picking one strategic direction and then decisively pursuing that direction are hallmarks of good leadership, if not boilerplate management skills. The big mystery is why these obviously important skills are still rare enough to distinguish excellent leaders from average managers. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/2013/10/just-make-a-decision-already/ to view the full article online.
Career
Office workers are being treated to a new game: musical chairs. By shifting employees from desk to desk every few months, scattering those who do the same types of jobs and rethinking which departments to place side by side, companies say they can increase productivity and collaboration. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304441404579123230310600884 to view the full article online.
Why do people who consider themselves good communicators often fail to actually hear each other? Often it’s due to a mismatch of styles: To someone who prefers to vent, someone who prefers to explain seems patronizing; explainers experience venters as volatile. This is why so many of us see our conversational counterparts as lecturing, belaboring, talking down to us, or even shaming us (if we are venters and they are explainers) or as invasive, out of control, and overly emotional (if we’re an explainer and they’re a venter). (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/2013/10/how-to-listen-when-your-communication-styles-dont-match/ to view the full article online.
Your column on how to recover from a failure recommended accepting the responsibility for what's gone wrong. I report to a boss who never does that. Instead, and especially when he's talking to higher-ups in the company, he hogs all the credit for our successes, while pointing the finger at me or at one of my eight teammates for things that haven't gone so well. (Fortune)
Visit http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2013/10/10/bosses-deception-blame-credit/?iid=SF_F_River to view the full article online.
Diversity in the Workplace
Chris Leatherwood is a seventh-grade math teacher at Gateway Middle School, and he is part of the two percent of teachers nationwide who are African-American males. He understands that there is a growing need for more black male teachers, he said. But that’s not why he chose to join Teach For America, a national organization that trains professionals to become teachers in low-income communities. (St. Louis American)
Visit http://www.stlamerican.com/news/local_news/article_4ef18fac-314a-11e3-9b99-001a4bcf887a.html to view the full article online.
International
Global finance chiefs chastised the U.S. for the political gridlock they identified as the biggest threat to the world’s economy and financial markets. Arriving in Washington for the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, policy makers expressed concern that failure by U.S. lawmakers to end a government shutdown and raise the nation’s debt ceiling could trigger default and recession, imperiling already historically sluggish growth around the globe. (Bloomberg)
Visit http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-10/shutdown-raises-global-recession-risk-as-lagarde-lambastes-u-s-.html to view the full article online.
Education
The M.B.A. graduating class of 2008 entered the job market in the teeth of the Great Recession. It was slim pickings for jobs for those outside the elite programs. Even grads of top schools got whacked. "My post-MBA career started with a nightmare, as I joined Lehman Brothers and the bank imploded within three weeks," says Petr Ostapenko who earned a degree from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. He ended up on the street and Lehman reclaimed his signing bonus. (Forbes)
Visit http://www.forbes.com/sites/kurtbadenhausen/2013/10/09/stanford-tops-2013-list-of-americas-best-business-schools/ to view the full article online.
Technology
The technology you've come to expect in computers and smartphones will increasingly be found in devices worn on your wrist or on your head. Or on your back or even on your feet. The market for wearable technology – such as Google Glass, the Samsung Galaxy Gear smartwatch or FitBit, a wearable fitness device – is poised to explode over the next few years, according to a recent report from Swedish telecom market researcher Berg Insight. (Entrepreneur)
Visit http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/229347 to view the full article online.
Entrepreneurship
In this week's issue of The New Yorker, columnist James Surowiecki weighs in on the Obamacare debate, with a column called "The Business End of Obamacare," which makes the case that "the likely benefits of Obamacare for small businesses are enormous." Is Surowiecki's assessment correct? Yes and no. (Inc.)
Visit http://www.inc.com/Adam-Bluestein/Obamacare-suroweiki.html to view the full article online.
Whether you've been in business one week or five years, an infusion of funds is always welcome. But what type of financing is best for your business? There are so many factors to consider – from the stage of your business to how much it'll cost to get the money – that just choosing a path to follow can be overwhelming. (Entrepreneur)
Visit http://www.entrepreneur.com/howto/raisemoney/index.html to view the full article online.
Personal Finance
It’s a midlife conundrum that’s becoming increasingly common: You’re not ready to retire, but you’re tired of what you’re doing. Enter the second-act career. These encore occupations offer a chance to pursue a lifelong passion, start a business or make a difference in your community. Often, second careers aren’t as lucrative or prestigious as first-act professions, but they’re less stressful and more emotionally satisfying. The people we profile here have strayed far from their original career paths – and they’re not looking back. (Kiplinger's)
Visit http://www.kiplingers.com/article/business/T012-C000-S002-starting-a-new-career-in-midlife.html to view the full article online.
Corporate America
Google’s Android grows stronger and is moving beyond smartphones to power cars, home electronics and wearable accessories. A thriving Amazon.com and Kindle are transforming publishing. In the hotel industry, AirBnB is disrupting the market. Now Twitter, with an ecosystem of more than one million apps, has filed its IPO to raise $1 billion. (MarketWatch)
Visit http://www.marketwatch.com/story/what-twitter-knows-that-blackberry-didnt-2013-10-10 to view the full article online.
Government
Insurance exchanges set up by the Affordable Care Act are open, and Blacks and Latinos are expected to make up the majority of new enrollees in the healthcare marketplace. But governors in nearly half the states in the country have been able to exclude their residents from parts of the law, leaving millions – mainly low-income Blacks and single mothers – with no way to find health coverage. (DiversityInc.)
Visit http://www.diversityinc.com/news/politics-leaves-millions-uninsured-ineligible-affordable-care-act-benefits/ to view the full article online.
Leadership
Ask your employees this: "How would you like to be rewarded for your efforts and performance, in addition to your fixed salary?" They will likely respond by asking for a cash reward in the form of a raise or bonus, which they can then spend on themselves. They might even convince you that spending this extra cash on the newest tablet on the market, or Daft Punk’s next album, will motivate them to work "harder, better, faster, stronger." Take what they say with a grain of salt. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/2013/10/the-bonus-employees-really-want-even-if-they-dont-know-it-yet/ to view the full article online.
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